Aleister
Crowley was an English witch. He reveled in his description as “the wickedest
man in the world.” He was a shameless self publicist, a fraud and a charlatan,
but he was also an educated, intelligent and willful diabolist.

He was indeed very wicked and was
definitely involved in just about every kind of vile perversion, drug addiction
and occult religious practice imaginable. He died in Hastings, on the south
coast of England, in 1947.

In 1982 I moved to Bexhill-on-Sea, a
town one step along the coast from Hastings. I was newly ordained as an
Anglican priest and was heading to my first parish. Living just around the
corner from the ancient parish church was a coven of witches whose leader
claimed to be the successor of Aleister Crowley. The “witches” were well-known
in the town. They lived in a kind of hippie commune, and their leader — a
lecherous man in his 50s — frequented all the bars and pubs. Rumors abounded
about their drug use, sexual immorality, corruption of young people and dark,
occult practices.

As a young priest involved in the
Christian youth work in the town, I came across several young people who had
been involved with the coven of witches. One afternoon I witnessed an old
priest deal successfully with what seemed to be demonic infestation of a
15-year-old girl who had been spending time with the witches. The stories the
young people told were of seriously sick and genuinely horrifying attitudes and
actions. More than once we had to deal with spiritual influences that were
dark, destructive and demonic.

Are witches real? Of course they
are. Are they skinny old women with green skin, pointy chins and warts on their
noses, who cackle over cauldrons? Of course not. Do they attend an academy
called “Hogwarts,” play a form of hockey on their broomsticks and battle
mythical beasts? Is “Samantha,” a pretty middle-class suburban wife with
magical powers and a gaggle of kooky and spooky family members, a witch? Of
course not. All of that is an attempt to make us believe that there are not
really such things as witches.

But there are. Witchcraft is alive
and well in our modern, secular age. It has taken the name “Wicca” and claims
an increasing number of adherents. Followers of Wicca profess to be modern
pagans. They claim to draw on the powers of nature to heal people, foretell the
future and put people in touch with their departed loved ones. The modern Wicca
religion is descended from another British witch, Gerald Gardener, who, in the
1950s, synthesized various strands of ancient paganism into a new mish-mash
kind of paganism.

Is there anything to it, or is it
just a load of silly, New Age nonsense? Be assured that there is not only
something to it, but something sinister. To put it bluntly, pagans worship the
gods and goddesses of the ancient world. The early Christians understood quite
clearly that the pagan gods and goddesses were demons. They understood that the
pagan rites were sacrifices made to demons, and that through the pagan
initiation rites devotees gave themselves to the demons and that as a result,
the pagan worshippers were usually demon-possessed. That’s why the preparation
for Christian baptism involved careful catechesis over a long period of time
with numerous exorcisms.

Is it possible for modern people to
summon up the ancient gods and goddesses and offer themselves to be infested by
such spirits? Of course it is. C.S. Lewis commented on the foolishness of
summoning up evil spirits, saying that if they were called we should not be
surprised if they arrive on our doorsteps. Followers of Wicca are not
benevolent New Agers who just happen to be
vegetarian, sandal-wearing bearded weirdoes. Their religion follows ancient
rites where they summon up the ancient gods and goddesses.

The
2001 census in the United States revealed 134,000 people who claim to follow
the Wiccan religion. The numbers are doubtless far greater now. Not only
are there more people involved in witchcraft than those who register formally,
but because the movement is diffuse and secretive and sectarian, there are far
more people involved in some form of occult practice than can be accurately
numbered. In addition to those who are consciously involved in pagan
witchcraft, there are a huge number of Americans who are involved in New Age
behaviors that (while not openly identified as witchcraft) are nevertheless
identical to occult practices.

If
a person is involved in fortune telling of any kind, tarot cards, Ouija boards,
séances, crystal healing, channeling, and astrology, they are involved in the
occult. If they are involved in certain types of depth psychology, re-birthing,
spiritualism, envisioning other lives, Native American spirituality, ecology
spirituality and radical feminist theology, they are probably meddling with the
occult as well. The vague attractiveness of the New Age movement as well as its
spiritual danger is explained well in the Pontifical Council for Interreligious
Dialogue’s document called “Jesus Christ, the Bearer of the Water of Life.”This
official Church teaching outlines the danger of the New Age movement and lists
the various (seemingly harmless) New Age practices that can lead true believers
into the occult.

What
did we do about the coven in the town where I was priest? A few members of the
youth group and I fasted on Fridays. Within six months the coven had moved out
of our geographical parish, and within the year they had moved out of the town
altogether. I don’t know if it was our prayer and fasting that drove them out,
but the Gospel says that a certain kind of demon only comes out through prayer
and fasting.

Therefore,
what is the best thing to do when confronted with someone involved in the
occult? It might be right to confront them and show them what is wrong with
their beliefs and practices, but that will probably not do much good. One of
the symptoms of occult involvement is a kind of spiritual, moral and
intellectual blindness. As St. Paul says in Romans 1:21, 24 “... their thinking
became futile and their foolish hearts were darkened.”

Instead, when confronted with those
who have given themselves to evil, I recommend skipping meals on Fridays,
praying a few extra Rosaries, and invoking the holy angels — especially St.
Michael. It will not only bring down the witches in full flight — it will also
do your spiritual life a world of good.

Father Dwight Longenecker is the chaplain of St. Joseph’s
Catholic School, Greenville, South Carolina. He also serves on the staff of St.
Mary’s, Greenville. His latest book is Praying the Rosary for Inner Healing. dwightlongenecker.com